Steve Jobs was so angered by Android and HTC that he reportedly told then …

Walter Isaacson's forthcoming biography of Steve Jobs is on a kind of crypto-PR tour, having magically landed in the hands of a gaggle of journalists well in advance of its publication. Said journalists are furiously typing with one hand and flipping pages with the other, bringing us glimpses of the year's most anticipated biography of a recently deceased mega-icon of technology. Yesterday, for instance, it was revealed that Jobs regretted delaying potentially life-extending surgery in the very early days of his diagnosis with pancreatic cancer. Now in a wide-ranging survey of the biography, the AP reports that Jobs' disdain for Android was much greater than that for any other competitive product.

According to Isaacson, Steve Jobs' reaction to the January 2010 unveiling of the HTC smartphone lineup was fury. Calling it "a great theft," Jobs supposedly proclaimed, "I will spend my last dying breath if I need to, and I will spend every penny of Apple's $40 billion in the bank, to right this wrong... I'm going to destroy Android, because it's a stolen product. I'm willing to go thermonuclear war on this."

Jobs meant it. Apple would kick off the lawsuits shortly thereafter, and the company hasn't been ignored itself. Countersuits have been filed, and as we have reported on Ars, just about everyone is suing everyone else.

Of course, lawsuits are usually made to be settled, but Jobs was having none of it. Meeting with then-Google CEO Eric Schmidt, a man who for years sat on Apple's board before Android made that no longer possible, Jobs told Schmidt that money wasn't going to make it right. "I don't want your money. If you offer me $5 billion, I won't want it," Jobs reportedly said. "I've got plenty of money. I want you to stop using our ideas in Android, that's all I want." And with that, the door to any possible settlement was slammed shut. We wonder if Jobs' passing will open the door to lawsuit settlements down the road.

Isaacson's book, Steve Jobs will hit store shelves on Monday, October 24, and the Ars review of the book will be up shortly thereafter, so keep an eye out for it.

Ken Fisher / Ken is the founder & Editor-in-Chief of Ars Technica. A veteran of the IT industry and a scholar of antiquity, Ken studies the emergence of intellectual property regimes and their effects on culture and innovation.